Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 May 1942 — Page 11
“Blue Monday,” by Floyd D. Hopper, won the Art Association prize.
Socie
[V—
The 35th Annual Exhibition Opens
At John
Herron Art Museum
*THREE INDIANAPOLIS MEN
and one from
Frankfort were selected as the prize winners at the invitational preview Saturday of the 35th annual exhibition of the work of Indiana artists at John Herron art
museum.
Floyd D. Hopper won the Art association prize with an oil
painting, “Blue Monday”;
Henrik L. Meyer was awarded the J. I.
Holcomb prize for a portrait, “Louise,” and Paul A. Wehr was given the water color prize for his scene, “Brick Mansion.” The three are from Indianapolis, Jon Jonson of Frankfort was the recipient of the Art association’s sculpture award. -
Honorable mention was given
to Stella C. Coler, Robert H.
Selby, Anne Warner West, Charles M. West Jr., all of Indianapolis; Joe H. Cox of Iowa City, Iowa; Karl Martz of Nashville and Marion
L. Patterson of Vincennes,
An additional prize will be awarded near the close of the exhibition based on the ballots cast by visitors for their favorite picture. The exhibit will run. to June 14. Included in the show are 125 paintings and 13 pieces of sculp‘ture. Prize winners were selected by a jury of two-out-of-state artists, Zoltan Sepeshy of Detroit and J. Jeffrey Grant of Chicago.
The Players Elect
2
J. PERRY MEEK was elected president of . The Players at
the organization's annual business night in the Woodstock club.
Other officers selected are Mrs.
meeting and dinner Saturday
Clifford Arrick, vice president;
Alfred W. Noling, vice president, and Mrs. Walter J. Stuhldreher,
secretary.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Richey were made honorary members of
the club.
“Early Indianapolis” will be Mrs.
#8. Hugh H. Hanna's subject when
she speaks next Monday before the. Review club meeting at the home of Mrs. John K. Goodwin. Assisting Mrs. Goodwin will be Mesdames J. Emmett Hall, J. Jerome Littell, Charles A. Rockwood, George T. O'Connor, Howard Meeker and Warren H. Maxwell.
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Mrs. Wayne Guthrie will be hostess Thursday for the Irvington chapter, D. A.R. Mrs. Donald J. Hendrickson will be assistant and Mrs. Frank R. Baker will report on the Continental Congress.
Portfolio Club Election Is Thursday
THE FORTNIGHTLY LITERARY CLUB will hear two papers read tomorrow at its 2:30 p. m. meeting in the Propylaesum. Mrs. Harry D. Tutewiler will have as her subject “Achievements” of Outstanding Negroes,” while Mrs. Gustavus B. Taylor will discuss “Achievements of Outstanding Foreign Born.” The meeting will
close the club’s season,
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Officers of the Portfolio club will be chosen at a meeting Thursday evening in the Propylaeum. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Scherrer and Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Schildknecht form the supper committee
for the evening.
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2 # s
Mrs. Evans Woollen Jr. and Mrs. "Corum D. Alexander will present the program at the Indianapolis Woman's club meeting at 3 o'clock Friday in' the Propylaeum. Mrs. Woollen’s topic. will be “In the Good Old Summertime,” and that of Mrs. Alexander will be “The Wheel of Fortune Turns in the Northwest.”
P-T. A News—
Election and installation meetings will claim the attention of ParentTeacher association groups meeting this week. The schedule follows:
TODAY
Shadeland (7:45 p. m.)—Talk by A. J. Thatcher, county safety director; installation of Mrs. Carl Genrich, president; Mrs. Roy Wells, vice president; Mrs. Arthur Collar, secretary; Mrs. Eunice Renick, treasurer. TOMORROW
William H. Evans 2 (2:15 p. m.)— Musical program; installation of Mrs. Thomas McAnany, president; Mrs. Harry Snodgrass, vice president; Mrs. Ray Fecher, secretary; Mrs. Gerlad Tracey, treasurer; Mesdames W. A. Benedict, Elbert Lockart and William Tegelar, board members, ' ; WEDNESDAY (2:15 p. m.)—Business session; style show by junior high home economics class; songs by 3d and 4th grade pupils.
9 (3:15 p. m.)—Spring music festival by 6th grade and junior high pupils. i : ~ 15 (2 p. m.)—“Hobbies,” by R. Carl Alford; May music festival by pupils and brass choir. » 21 (2:30 p. m.)—Program by pupils; tea. 23 (2:30 p. m.)—“The Child and the City Streets,” by R. K. Smith; songs by intermediate chorus; awarding of William E. Baugh me- ' morial award BY ‘Ores Psi’ Phi - fraternity. 27 (2:15 p. m.)—Talks on gas and bombs by Mrs. H. S. Cheney and Mrs. L. H. Earle; play by pupils. 28 (3:15 p. m.)—Program by pupils; social hour directed by teachers. 30 (1:30 p. m.)—"Play Day” in school yard. 31 (2:30 p. m.)—Business meeting; installation of officers
Cummings; film, “Living for Health and Happiness”; playlet, “Safety in the Home,” by pupils; music by 2A
_|chorus.
36 pupils. 41 (1:30 p. m.)—Safety program. 43 (1:30 p. m.)—“Summer Recrea-
tion,’ by J. Patrick Rooney of park board.
491 (2:45 p. m)—Chalk talk by Mrs. | Lester Ford; mothers’ tea. 52 |(8:35 a. m.)—Program by 5th and | 6th grade chorus; business meeting; music by junior high chorus.
53 (3:10 p. m.)—“Health and Accident Prevention,” by a representative of Bankers’ Trust company.
54 (1:15 p. m.)—“Social Studies in the Schools,” by pupils and mothers’ chorus.
(2:30 p. m)—Program by
57 (1:15 p. m.)—Music by Madri- |;
gal singers of Technical high school, directed by J. Russell Paxton: music by “Toy Band;” tea for mothers of 8A pupils.
62 (1:30 p. m.)—Music week observance; songs by junior high, boys’ glee club, girls’ choir and 6th grade pupils of Mrs. Edna Jones and Mrs. Berta Romine; school orchestra to play; Miss Mae Henri Lane, director; installation of officers by Mrs. A. M. Welchons; tea honoring officers.
66 (7:30 p. m.)—Talk by Dr. Roy Ewing Vale; annual reports by board members; fathers invited. | 67 (2. p. m)—Talk by O. H. Greist; program directed by Miss Grace Wood and Miss Newell Hulvershorn, teachers. 69 (2 p! m.)—“Safety Day”; junior high boys as guests; music by male quartet from Crispus Attucks high school; address by Charles W. Youngman, school 8 principal; instaliation of C. E. Hostetler Jr. president; Mrs. C. J. Turner, vice
president; Mrs. Ward M. Boutwell,
Hendrik L. Mayer’s “Louise” was a winner,
Paul A. Wehr’s “Brick Mansion” received the water color prize.
Class to Get
Certificates In Nutrition
Certificates in nutrition soon will be awarded to 24 local housewives by the Indianapolis chapter of the American Red Cross, according to Mrs. Marshall Vogeler, newly appointed Red Cross nutrition class director.
Examinations were given this week in the Citizens. Gas & Coke utility auditorium, where the women had taken 20 hours of special nutrition study. By attending class three times weekly, the group completed the course, which normally takes 10 weeks, in three weeks. Miss Marian Schleicher, home service director for the gas utility, was assistant instructor.
Nutrition certificates are the first step in preparing women for future American Red Cross canteen work. Twenty hours of additional canteen study must be successfully completed before they become accredited canteen workers. Among those who will receive certificates are Mesdames Freeman Ball, C. A. Campbell, A. R. Dittrich, R. A. Couch, Raymond Hoffman, F. S. Taylor, Fred E. Gifford, R. R. Edwards, Lawrence L. Solmer, C. J. Geiger, T. M. Overley and Lyman R. Pearson. Also, Mesdames A. F. Pittman, J. F. Hitchcock, A. R. Coffin, C.-V. Rule, George L. Bradshaw, Jeanne Margolis, Edgar J. Rennce, Floyd R. Kratoska, Ben Aspy, Thomas Noble Jr., Louis Gausepohl and Ray H. Wilson. Thirty business women are enrolled in a second nutrition class now in progress in the Gas Utility's auditorium on Wednesday nights. Instructors are Miss Rosemary Lodde, dietitian at the Indiana university medical center, and Mrs. Paul Stokes, a university graduate in home economics.
Start Class
Another daytime nutrition class for housewives is scheduled to start today in the auditorium. Mrs. Vogeler and Miss Schleicher will teach this class. The latest report showed a registration of 101 women. Formal applications for these classes may be made at the Red Cross office, second floor, Chamber of Commerce building. Mrs. Gausepohl, volunteer chairman of' the canteen division, is in charge.
Lois Circle to Hear Talk by President
Mrs. J. E. Barcus, president of the Lois circle of the Third Christian church, will discuss “International Relations With South American Republics” at a circle meeting tomorrow. Members will meet with Mrs. Thomas A. Bunch, 8161 Rosemeade lane. The luncheon committee chairman, Mrs. Carl Gakstetter, will be assisted by Mesdames O. D. Bales, W. H. Book, George F. Goldman, Josephine McNevin, W. H. McPherson, James Woods and Barcus. The devotional period will be conducted by Mrs. Gakstetter.
Mrs. Beale to Speak
Frances Willard W. C. T. U. will meet at the home of Mrs. Pearl Smith, 1047 W, 33d st., at 2 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. John G. Beale, state secretary of the Riley hospital Cheer guild, will speak. Mrs. Smith will have charge of a white ribbon recruit service.
Bride-to-Be
A wedding in early June will be that of Miss Margaret Rogers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ora H. Re ack
Inew officers:
Clubs— Amicitia Club to
Alpha Beta Latreian Plans Tea; Proctor Club to Conclude Season
Have Guest Day;
Guest day meetings highlight club calendars tomorrow. Mrs. William Burroughs, 24 N. Webster ave., will be hostess for the guest day planned tomorrow by the AMICITIA club, Her assistants will be Mrs.
william Perry and Mrs. Ed Smith. “Early Painters of Indiana” will be Wilbur D. Peat’s subject when he appears tomorrow on the guest day program of the IRVINGTON Tuesday club. Mrs. M. D. Lupton, 5070 Pleasant Run parkway, N. drive, will be hostess.
Mrs. D. E. Bloodgood will present the program at the guest meeting to be held tomorrow by CHAPTER W, P. E. O. sisterhood, at the home of Mrs. LeRoy L. Wahle, 135 E. 47th st. The hostess will be assisted by Mesdames Eugene C. Hall, Clarence Jackson and H. R. Gearhart.
A mothers’ meeting and tea at the Julia Jameson Nutrition camp are planned for tomorrow by the ALPHA BETA LATERIAN club.
ALPHA DELTA LATREIAN members will hear a talk on “Two Wheeling Along the Byways” by Mrs. Bert McCammon tomorrow when they meet with Mrs. Harold Bartholomew, 5607 Broadway. Mesdames Denton McVey, E. P. Nicholson and Ellison Fadley will be assistant hostesses.
Mrs. J. P. Aspinall, 5688 Guilford ave., will entertain’ the HOOSIER TOURIST club tomorrow in her home. Continuing a study of American personalities, talks will be given on Thomas Hart Benton, Elsa Maxwell and Sarah T. Bolton by Mesdames C. C. Spurrier, Roy H. Peterson and Walter G. Holt.
A review of “All Their Lives” (Myron Brinig) by Mrs. Don Jenkins will be a feature of the INTER ALIA club’s meeting tomorrow. Mrs. George Bruce also will appear on the program. The hostess will be Mrs. Joseph P. Merriam, 2801 Sutherland ave.
Music appreciation will be the program theme at the MERIDIAN HEIGHTS INTER-SE club meeting tomorrow. Mrs. T. M. Riddick Jr. is program chairman. Mrs. J. A. Hogshire Jr. 4503 N. Pennsylvania st., will be hostess, assisted by Mrs. George Lilly.
CHAPTER U, P. E. O. sisterhood, will meet for a 1 p. m. luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. J. A. Crewes, 6427 Pleasant Run parkway. Mrs. H. R. Hough will assist. Convention plans' will be discussed and Mrs. F. E. Best will present “Gleanings From the Record.”
Mrs. John J. Kennedy, 5545 N. Meridian st., will entertain the PROCTER club tomorrow. Mrs. William J. Stark will talk on “A Musical Postscript.” The meeting will close the club’s season.
A music week program will be presented tomorrow by Mrs. Floyd J. Trusty before the SOCIAL STUDY club meeting at the home of Mrs. Firman C. Sims, 5456 Hibben ave.
“Uruguay and Paraguay” will be the program theme for a meeting to be held tomorrow by the TOKALON club. Mrs. Carl W. Bruenger is to speak at the meeting for which Mrs. C. Frederick. Schmidt, 244 S. First st., Beech Grove, will be hostess.
The monthly luncheon meeting of the ROBERTS’ PARLIAMENTARY LAW CLUB, INC., will be held at 11:30 a. m. tomorrow in Ayres’ tearoom. Hostesses will be Mrs. D. H. White and Mrs. Harry Wissel. Following luncheon a business meeting will be held with Mrs. E.
C. Wakelan presiding.
Arrangements will be made for the club’s fifth anniversary -celebration in June. Mrs. Rose Marie Cruzan will conduct talks on parliamentary law by members. Mrs. A.
: |G. Hendricks and Mrs. C. A. Childi fers will be guests.
Mrs. A. J. Clark will install the Mrs. O. C. Dorrah, president; Mrs. J. Francis Huffman and . Charles Bogart, vice presidents; Mrs. O. F. Wulfekammer and Mrs. Ruth Glover, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. R. J. Worthington, treasurer; Mrs. P. P. Barrett and Mrs. N."D. Richardson, auditors, and Mesdames Wakelam, Dorrah and Cruzan, directors.
The HERE-AND-THERE HOMEMAKERS’ club will meet at 10:30
a. m. tomorrow with Mrs. Glen|ca
Dearinger, 1959 Graham ave. A program feature will be a talk on "* {illustrated by
Sororities— Mrs. Harry Ice To Entertain Sorority
A supper meeting and a meeting to plan a dance are on the calendars of local sororities. Members of KAPPA DELTA THETA will be entertained at an outdoor supper at 6 p. m. Wednesday by Mrs. Harry Ice, 264 W. 54th st.
Plans for a dance to be given later this month will be discussed by LAMBDA CHI DELTA members when they meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow with Mrs. Henry Shirley, 708 E. 11th st., apartment 6.
GAMMA DELTA chapter, KAPPA DELTA PHI, will hold a business meeting at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the hotel Lincoln. Reports will be given by members of committees in charge of the sorority’s national convention which is to be held June 19 to 21 with the local chapter as hostess. :
A short business meeting will be held at 8 p. m. today by SIGMA PHI GAMMA at the home of Mrs. Philip Elrod, 127 E. 30th st.
Mrs. Arthur McDermid, 121 Bosart ave., will be hostess, at 8 p. m. today for SIGMA LAMBDA CHI
PSI chapter, ALPHA OMICRON ALPHA, will meet at 1 p. m. Wednesday in the Spencer hotel for a luncheon and business meeting.
Tiered Skirt
Guild Furnishes Five-Bed Ward
|At St. Francis
St. Francis hospital will celebrate national hospital day tomorrow by dedicating the “Guardian Angel Ward” made possible by the St. Francis Hospital guild. The five-bed ward is intended for the use of children. The project was financed by several Indianapolis business men and through the work of the guild. From 2 to 4 p. m., the hospital will hold open house. Mrs. Edward C. Heidenreich will be chairman for the afternoon. Assisting her will be the guild’s hospitality com=mittee including Mesdames James P. Mugivan, Louis Topmiller, Carrie Oberting, John H. Heidenreich, R. J. Matthews and Katherine Alsmeyer. The committee. and members of the guild will serve as guides for tours of the building and grounds. Refreshments will be served and Miss Victoria Montani, harpist, will play. : At 7:45 o'clock, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Peter Killian will deliver the dedicatory address and will accept the “Guardian Angel Ward” from the guild for the hospital. Following, Gordon Kronoscheck, boy soprano, will sing “Ave Maria.” The boys’ choir of St. Catherine o! Sienna church will sing patriotic songs under the direction of Paul F. Eggert, church organist. It includes Robert Nevitt, Charles ‘Wuensch, John Burns, Donald Springman, Paul Mattingly, Robert Strack, John / Curd and Lawrence Risley. Activities will be closed with the benediction of the blessed Sacrsment given by the Rev. Fr. Aloysius Duffy and sung by the boy choristers.
Rose Festival Committees
Are Chosen
Committees for the sixth annual rose festival, to be held May 31 at the Hillsdale nurseries at Castleton, have been announced by Alex Tuschinsky, general chairman. James H. Lowry is vice chairman. Personnel of the sub-committees follows: Master of ceremonies — Judge Henry O. Goett and Mr. Lowry; patriotic — Col. Walter S. Drysdale, Col. William D. Cleary; Comm. R. H. G. Mathews, Delmer H. Wilson and the Rev. U. S. Clutton. Band Concert—Raymond G. Oster, Mr. Wilson and George Coifin; swimming and water carnival —Paul Jordan, Miss Pat McGuire, Mr. Coffin and Miss Emily Jackson. Reception — Governor and Mrs. Henry F. Schricker, Col. Drysdale, Lieut. and Mrs. Louis F. Brozo, Col. Roscoe Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, Judge and Mrs. Goett, F. O.
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‘lace O. Lee, A. E. Baker, Lowry, LJ. Badollet, John Hook and Tuschinsky.
Others Named
* Garden club information and educational—Mrs. H. P. Willwerth, chairman, and Mesdames Hook, Merritt Woolf and E. R. Becker and garden club presidents; rose queen contest—Misses Virginia Samsell, Marcella West, Jackson and Tudy Gessert. Rose queen judges—Wilbur D. Peat, Miss Jane Stewart and Col. Richard Lieber; publicity — Mr. Badollet, Fred Cretors and Frank Sharp; traffic and grounds—Louis L. Gessert, Floyd Dawson and Boy Scouts. Traffic on public highways—Don Stiver, Sergt. Oscar Burkett and Sheriff Al Feeney; refreshments— Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schubert and Mrs. Gessert; moving pictures— Harry M. Pearce. Speakers—Mr. Tuschinsky, Governor Schricker, Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, Col. Cleary and the Rev. Mr. Clutton; patriotic ceremonies— Col. Drysdale, Comm. Mathews, Col. Cleary and Mr. Wilson.
Fraternity Mothers’ Club to Elect
Officers will be elected by the Lambda Chi Alpha Mothers’ club of Butler university at a 2 p. m« meeting tomorrow in the chapter house, 4721 Sunset ave. Appearing on the program following the business meeting will be
Shower Will Honor Helen Stamper
A miscellaneous shower will be given tomorrow night for Miss Helen Stamper, who marriage to Lewis T. Smith will be Saturday in the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church, Miss Anne E, Smith will be hostess at the home of her aunt, Mrs. C. C. Trueblood, 836 Berkley road. Guests will be Mesdames S, A. Stamper, Gray Burdin and L. F. Davis, Misses Helen Feisbeck, Anne Howarth, Edna May r Hicks and Rebs Pendry.
Church News— Advent Guild To Sponsor Book Review
A book review and a card party are features of churchwomen’s meetings booked for the week. The last in a series of six book reviews will be sponsored tomorrow by St. Catherine’s guild of the ADVENT EPISCOPAL church. Mrs. Russell J. Sanders will talk on “The Strong City” (Taylor Caldwell) at
130 p. m. in Ayres’ auditorium. Hostesses will be Mesdames R. C. Cashon, Allan Ritchie, Willis Conover Jr. and Paul Whipple. Assisting Mrs. Martha Ryan, refreshments chairman, will be Mesdames Clement McMillan, Mary Comerford, Harold Caldwell and Harold Prather, Misses Elsie Carter, Bettie Wolfe, Helen and Ann Hurley, Nell Sage, Thelma Haugh, Mary Joyce and Honora McEvilly.
The Woman's society of MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN church will meet at 2 p. m. Wednesday with Mrs, Frank Miller, 5302 Central ave. A worship service will be conducted by Mrs. J. C. Pritchett Jr. and the program will be presented by Mrs. Walter Lemon and Mrs. Norman Peine. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames J. C. Pritchett, J.C. Pritchett Jr., J. D. Dungan, John S. Williams, Kenneth Harker and C. W. MePherson.
A skating party will be sponsored Friday evening at Rollerland rink .by the Good Will club of ST. JOSEPH'S church. Miss Margaret Smith and Mrs. Margaret Halfaker will be in charge.
Laura E. F unk
Becomes Bride
Following their marriage late Sate urday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Ede gar Miller left for a wedding trip west. They will be at home, after May 20, near Fountaintown, in Shelby county. Mrs. Miller was Miss Laura RB = Funk, E. National road, formerly of St. Louis. The ceremony, at 5:30 p. m. in the parsonage of St. John’s Evangelical and Reformed church near Cumberland, was read by the Rev. F. P. Puhlmann, pastor of the church. An improvised altar of gladioli, roses and greenery was arranged for the rite. Miss Lillian Bodensick, pighist, played bridal airs, including the Lohengrin wedding march. Ni Attendants were Mrs. Puhlmann | and the bride's nephew, Clarence | Willman, The bride wore a beige redingote with matching accessories and a corsage of Sunburst roses, Mrs. Puhlmann’s green-printed rgde
ingote was accented by a pink rose
corsage. A dinner at the parsonage for the
ceremony. ding trip, the bride wore a black redingote with green accessories. Out-of-town guests included Mrs. Ed Rasp, Chicago, and the bride’s sisters, Mrs. Charlotte Knake, and Misses Neosho, Florence and Abbie Funk, all of St, Louis.’
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